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The Khanqah-e-Moula Kashmiri: خانقاہِ معلیٰ), also known as Shah-e-Hamadan Masjid and Khanqah, is a Sunni mosque located in the Old City of Srinagar in Jammu and Kashmir, India.
Mir Sayyid Ali Hamadani (Persian: میر سید علی همدانی; c. 1312–1385 CE) was a Sufi sunni Muslim saint of the Kubrawiya order, who played an important role in spread of Islam in the Kashmir Valley of northern India.
Shah-i-Zinda necropolis. Tombs of Kusam ibn Abbas (cousin of Muhammad); many different 9th–14th century tombs of scholars, poets, military men, etc. Baha' al-Din Naqshband, founder of what would become one of the largest Sufi Sunni orders, the Naqshbandi, buried in Bukhara.
Hamadani's religious legacy in Kashmir as well as his headquarter (Persian: Khanqah) the Khanqa-e-Mola became under the control of the Grand Sayyid Hazrat Ishaan. Hazrat Ishaan's descendants are buried in Hamadani's headquarters, on which occasion it is known as the "Ziyarat Naqshband Sahab" today. [19] [20] [21]
Hamdani, Hamadani, Hamedani or Hamadhani (Arabic: همذاني, Persian: همدانی) is a Persian attributive title (or also an Arabic nisbah) that denotes an origin from the Hamadan province of Iran.It is commonly used for Badi' al-Zaman al-Hamadani, but the many notable people with the surname include:
Ahmad Shah ordered that his reign be documented so that it could be used as a model for governing rulers in the future. [2] Ahmad gave the order for Muhammad Taqi Khan Shirazi, a former Afsharid official, to send a scribe with the skill to match Nadir Shah's chronicler Mirza Mahdi Astarabadi, especially his most important work, the Tarikh-i Nadiri. [2]
Hamadani, Hamedani or Hamadhani denotes something or someone related to the town of Hamadan in Iran, and may refer to: Places. Aghbolagh-e Hamadani, a village in ...
Personal pronouns in Judeo-Hamadani are identical to those in Persian save for two differences: Judeo-Hamadani has the -ā-vowel in mān "I," and uses the form hāmā "we" as opposed to the Persian mā. Clitics in Judeo-Hamadani are mobile, and there is a general tendency for movement forward, to the left.